Sheldon v. Chicago Bonding & Surety Co.

190 Iowa 945
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 190 Iowa 945 (Sheldon v. Chicago Bonding & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheldon v. Chicago Bonding & Surety Co., 190 Iowa 945 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Preston, J.

i mechanics’ liens: separate contracts of separate owners as 1¡en. — 1. The record, with nine abstracts and additional abstracts and twelve arguments, including supplemental arguments and responses thereto, makes a voluminous record, an(^ somewhat complicated. The statement of the jssues and 0f the facts alone, as stated and re-3 stated by counsel in the different briefs, comprises 150 pages. Of course, it would not be practicable, within the proper limits of an opinion, to go into and state the evidence, or even the details of all the different [948]*948propositions argued. The principal appeal has reference to the liability of the appellant Bonding Company, and its chief reliance for a reversal is its claim that the hotel building in question was, in fact, two separate and distinct buildings. They concede that architecturally it was but one building, but they say that legally there were two, and they contend that, since there were two contracts with the contractors, one between it and Sheldon, and the other between .it and the Munns, and two bonds, issued by the Bonding Company to Sheldon and the Munns, the abandonment, as the Bonding Company says, of that arrangement, and the building of the hotel as one proposition, amount to such a variation of the contract or contracts as to release the Surety Company. There was a contract between Sheldon and the Munns themselves, in regard to building the hotel, and providing for their interest therein, and how the building should be constructed and used. Such contract was entered into before, but at about the time of, the making of the plans and specifications of the contract with the contractor and the issuance of the bonds by the appellant Bonding Company. The trial court found that, while the contracts, as between the plaintiff Sheldon and the Munns, were several, yet as to the lien-holders, contractor, and the Bonding Company, they were joint; that it was, in fact, understood by the contractor, by the Bonding Company, as surety, and by the plaintiffs, that the two contracts would be performed as one contract; and that the same were, in f¿ct, so undertaken by the contractor; and that all contracts with subcontractors were made as single contracts for material or labor, to be used or performed promiscuously or interchangeably for the entire building, as one structure; and that, as between the plaintiffs and the contractor and the defendant Bonding Company, it was- agreed and understood that the plaintiff Sheldon should be liable for 53y2 per cent of the expense of constructing said building, and that the Munns should be liable for 46y2 per cent thereof. It is contended by this appellant that neither it nor its representative, Coder, kneiv of these fractions, but it is undisputed that the amount fixed which Sheldon and the Munns should pay of the original contract price, of which, we shall see later, the Bonding Company did have knowledge, was based upon the proportion of the original contract price [949]*949represented, or arrived at by the use of these fractions. It is argued by this appellant, the Surety Company, that every mechanics’ lien is founded upon and arises by virtue of a contract with the owner for the construction of the building or improvement ; and that the original contract with the principal contractor is the fundamental law that governs all subcontractors (Section 3089, Code, 1897; Redman v. Williamson, 2 Iowa 488, 491; Getty & Born v. Tramel, 67 Iowa 288; Wilkins v. Litchfield, 69 Iowa 465, 466; Templin v. Chicago, B. & P. R. Co., 73 Iowa 548; Littleton Sav. Bank v. Osceola Land Co., 76 Iowa 660; Hoag & Griffith v. Hay, 103 Iowa 291; Webster City S. R. Co. v. Chamberlin, 137 Iowa 717; Beach v. Stamper, 44 Ore. 4 [74 Pac. 208] ; McAdow v. Sturtevant, 41 Mo. App. 220, 226); and that a subcontractor who furnishes material or labor for any building or improvement is charged with notice and knowledge of the terms of the contract between the owner and the principal contractor (Kilbourne, Jenkins & Co. v. Jennings & Co., 38 Iowa 533; Stewart & Hayden v. Wright, 52 Iowa 335; Jones & Magee Lbr. Co. v. Murphy, 64 Iowa 165, 171, 172; Blanding v. Davenport, I. & D. R. Co., 88 Iowa 225, 231, 233; Iowa Stone Co. v. Crissman, 112 Iowa 122; Garrison G. & L. Co. v. Farmers Merc. Co., 181 Iowa 568, 575); that, the contract between the owner and the principal contractor being the basis of a mechanics’ lien, a subcontractor cannot secure a lien that the principal contractor would not be entitled to (Stoltze v. Hurd, 20 N. D. 412 [128 N. W. 115]; Beach v. Stamper, 44 Ore. 4 [74 Pac. 208]; Knauft v. Miller, 45 Minn. 61 [47 N. W. 313, 314]); that the Sheldon-Munn Hotel is, in fact and in law, two separate buildings, and these separate buildings are simply being used together for a temporary common purpose (Rhodes, Pegram & Co. v. McCormick, 4 Iowa 368; McCormick v. Bishop, 28 Iowa 233, 238; Ottumwa Lodge v. Lewis, 34 Iowa 67; Jackson v. Bruns, 129 Iowa 616, 619; Shirley v. Crabb, 138 Ind. 200 [37 N. E. 130, 132]; Lax v. Peterson, 42 Minn. 214 [44 N. W. 3]; Phillips v. Gilbert, 101 U. S. 721; Badger Lbr. Co. v. Stepp, 157 Mo. 366 [57 S. W. 1059, 1064]); and finally, that blanket or joint liens are valid when there is a joint or single contract, and are illegal and not enforcible when the contracts are separate (Chase v. Garver Coal Co., 90 Iowa 25, 26, 29; Hoag & Griffith v. Hay, 103 Iowa [950]*950291, 295; Noye Mfg. Co. v. Thread F. M. Co., 110 Mich. 161 [67 N. W. 1108]; King, Gilbert & Warner v. Ship Building Co., 50 Ohio St. 320 [34 N. E. 436] ; Bowman Lbr. Co. v. Newton, 72 Iowa 90; Lewis v. Saylors, 73 Iowa 504; Williams v. Judd-Wells Co., 91 Iowa 378; Bartlett & Norton v. Bilger, 92 Iowa 732, 737, 739; Eisenbeis v. Wakeman, 3 Wash. 534 [28 Pac. 923] ; Cahill v. Capen, 147 Mass. 493 [18 N. E. 419] ; Stoltze v. Hurd, 20 N. D. 412 [128 N. W. 115] ; Meyers Lbr. Co. v. Trygstad, 22 N. D. 558 [134 N. W. 714] ; Meyers Lbr. Co. v. Tompkins, 29 N. D. 76 [149 N. W. 955]).

If it be held that the hotel building was one building, and that the contracts other than the one between the two plaintiffs should be construed as one contract, we assume that this appellant would make no controversy as to the rights of the contractor, owner, and subcontractors, under the statute and cases before cited. There are cases under different facts where a building, or different parts of a building, would be considered as separate buildings, for some purposes, under the group of cases cited by appellant and before referred to, beginning with the case of Rhodes, Pegram & Co. v. McCormick, supra. We do not understand plaintiffs to dispute appellant’s proposition contained in the authorities last above cited by appellant, that blanket or joint liens may not be enforced when the contracts and the enterprise are separate. Was this structure one building, under one contract, or were they separate, as between these contending parties, — the plaintiffs on one hand, and the appellant and the contractor and subcontractors on the other? We turn to the record, and shall set out some of the more important matters bearing upon this question and related questions.

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Bluebook (online)
190 Iowa 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheldon-v-chicago-bonding-surety-co-iowa-1921.